Profile: Virtually every bench player on the Nationals had a strong season, and Tyler Moore was no exception. Though he slugged 31 home runs in the minors in both 2010 and 2011, Moore was never considered a strong prospect. The power translated to the majors last season, as Moore slugged 10 bombs in 171 plate appearances. With the team re-signing Adam LaRoche to man first, Moore will reprise his role as a backup at first and in the outfield, where he can supply nice power off the bench. The strikeouts would be a concern in a full-time role, and would limit his average, but he might hit a decent amount of home runs and should be picked up quickly in the even of an injury to Jayson Werth or Adam LaRoche. (Chris Cwik)

The Quick Opinion: The Nationals are set at first base with Adam LaRoche. Moore probably won't get a ton of playing time, but could be a decent source of power if he does happen to fall into a full-time role. Strikeouts will limit his average.

Profile: Moore has 95 home runs in his last 1,777 plate appearances across four levels. That's one every 18.7 plate appearances. The guy obviously has power. The problem is that he won't get enough playing time to really let that power become a fantasy asset. With Adam LaRoche ahead of him at first base, Moore will be hard pressed to get much more than about 200 plate appearances unless LaRoche gets hurt. He could hit 10 home runs in limited work which has some value in NL-only leagues, but that's the extent of his fantasy value as long as LaRoche is healthy. (Brett Talley)

The Quick Opinion: Moore has some power that could be useful to fantasy owners, but he won't get enough playing time to have fantasy value unless Adam LaRoche gets hurt.

Profile: As a former 16th-round draft pick, it's commendable that Tyler Moore was even able to make it to the big leagues, let alone log 180 games. The back-to-back 31 home run seasons in 2010-11 certainly earned him the attention, but he's been unable to replicate the success since. Now in his late 20s, the window of opportunity is closing more quickly on the first baseman. Only weak organizational depth and an injury prone big league first baseman (Ryan Zimmerman) conspire to mean that Tyler could receive more (sorry) big league at-bats in 2015. Don't expect fantasy relevance. (Marc Hulet)

The Quick Opinion: Moore had some intriguing minor league seasons when he showed well-above-average power but those days are long gone. He's a short-term injury replacement, at best.

Profile: There was a time when Tyler Moore, 29, was a prospect with power upside. Those days are long gone. Moore has only a .401 slugging percentage to show for his career 649 plate appearances over the past four seasons, and he owns a dreadful 27.4% career strikeout rate. To be fair, Moore cut down on the swings and misses in 2015, but he doesn’t get on base and isn’t a competent enough defender to sneak into the lineup on a regular basis. Washington brought back Moore for 2016, and the creaky presence of Ryan Zimmerman and Jayson Werth means that at-bats could be up for grabs, but with Clint Robinson now the Nationals’ primary first base/outfield reservist, there’s little use for Moore so far as fantasy owners are concerned. (Karl de Vries)

The Quick Opinion: Tyler Moore once had power upside as a prospect, but hasn’t translated that ability to the major leagues and has no clear path to playing time in Washington this season. Skip him in all formats.